Added to your basket
A London Trilogy: The films of St Etienne - 2003-2007
RRP: £19.99
£16.99
Save: £3.00
-
4 instalments of £4.24 with clearpay Learn more
From a beautifully conceived film-poem and an imaginative exploration of the Lower Lea Valley to an uplifting documentary on a London landmark, the collaborations between much-loved electronic indie trio Saint Etienne and filmmaker Paul Kelly (Lawrence of Belgravia) document London's ever-changing environment and landscapes to music by the band.
Available together on one DVD for the very first time, this loose trilogy is supported by rare and previously unavailable short films.
Episodes Comprise:
Finisterre (2003, Dir. Paul Kelly and Kieran Evans)
Homage to London featuring a host of well-known voices who've made the capital their own, sound tracked by songs from the Saint Etienne album of the same name.
What Have You Done Today Mervyn Day? (2005, Dir. Paul Kelly)
We follow paperboy 'Mervyn Day' on his round, tracing the fascinating hidden history of East London's Lower Lea Valley in the years before it was redeveloped to become the Olympic Park. Commissioned by the Royal Festival Hall to mark its renovation and reopening.
This is Tomorrow (2007, Dir. Paul Kelly)
Lovingly records the immense labour that went into the refurbishment of one of London's most distinguished concert venues.
Special Features:
- Today's Special (2004, 9 mins): a series of three shorts about London's disappearing cafes
- Banksy in London (2003, 3 mins): outtakes from Finisterre that document the artist's work, some of which is no longer in situ
- Monty the Lamb (2006, 12 mins): a day in the life of Monty, mascot for North London's Hendon FC
- Seven Summers (2012, 10 mins): Sarah Cracknell narrates this follow up to Mervyn Day, which revisits the Lea Valley seven years on from the making of that film
- The Other South Bank (2008, 9 mins): a look at Tyneside's South Bank area
- Fully illustrated booklet with newly commissioned essays
Cast and Crew: Directed by Paul Kelly (Lawrence of Belgravia), Keiron Yates. Featuring music by Saint Etienne.
Awards and Reviews:
‘Mervyn Day is potently evocative. Like an Iain Sinclair book we see ugly, ordinary London through Paul Kelly’s eyes, until its strange beauty begins to surface.’ The Independent
‘Simply fantastic. [Finisterre] is an atmospheric journey through the ruins of contemporary London.’ The Times
‘[Finisterre] is all very Saint Etienne, very nouvelle vague, and really very good.’ Daily Telegraph
- BFI
- 180 mins approx.
- Paul Kelly
- Keiron Yates
- PG
- English
- 1
- 2
A London Trilogy: The films of St Etienne - 2003-2007
RRP: £19.99
£16.99
Save: £3.00
Sold out
Region 2 DVD (may not be viewable outside Europe).
-
4 instalments of £4.24 with clearpay Learn more
Delivery & Returns
From a beautifully conceived film-poem and an imaginative exploration of the Lower Lea Valley to an uplifting documentary on a London landmark, the collaborations between much-loved electronic indie trio Saint Etienne and filmmaker Paul Kelly (Lawrence of Belgravia) document London's ever-changing environment and landscapes to music by the band.
Available together on one DVD for the very first time, this loose trilogy is supported by rare and previously unavailable short films.
Episodes Comprise:
Finisterre (2003, Dir. Paul Kelly and Kieran Evans)
Homage to London featuring a host of well-known voices who've made the capital their own, sound tracked by songs from the Saint Etienne album of the same name.
What Have You Done Today Mervyn Day? (2005, Dir. Paul Kelly)
We follow paperboy 'Mervyn Day' on his round, tracing the fascinating hidden history of East London's Lower Lea Valley in the years before it was redeveloped to become the Olympic Park. Commissioned by the Royal Festival Hall to mark its renovation and reopening.
This is Tomorrow (2007, Dir. Paul Kelly)
Lovingly records the immense labour that went into the refurbishment of one of London's most distinguished concert venues.
Special Features:
- Today's Special (2004, 9 mins): a series of three shorts about London's disappearing cafes
- Banksy in London (2003, 3 mins): outtakes from Finisterre that document the artist's work, some of which is no longer in situ
- Monty the Lamb (2006, 12 mins): a day in the life of Monty, mascot for North London's Hendon FC
- Seven Summers (2012, 10 mins): Sarah Cracknell narrates this follow up to Mervyn Day, which revisits the Lea Valley seven years on from the making of that film
- The Other South Bank (2008, 9 mins): a look at Tyneside's South Bank area
- Fully illustrated booklet with newly commissioned essays
Cast and Crew: Directed by Paul Kelly (Lawrence of Belgravia), Keiron Yates. Featuring music by Saint Etienne.
Awards and Reviews:
‘Mervyn Day is potently evocative. Like an Iain Sinclair book we see ugly, ordinary London through Paul Kelly’s eyes, until its strange beauty begins to surface.’ The Independent
‘Simply fantastic. [Finisterre] is an atmospheric journey through the ruins of contemporary London.’ The Times
‘[Finisterre] is all very Saint Etienne, very nouvelle vague, and really very good.’ Daily Telegraph
- BFI
- 180 mins approx.
- Paul Kelly
- Keiron Yates
- PG
- English
- 1
- 2
Customer Reviews
There are currently no reviews.